Best Free Font Websites for Cricut and Crafting Projects

Finding the perfect font can make or break your crafting project. Whether you’re designing vinyl decals, making greeting cards, or creating custom t-shirts, the right font sets the whole mood.

The good news? You don’t have to spend a fortune on fonts. There are plenty of places to download beautiful fonts for free!

Note: There is no affiliation with any of the sites mentioned in this post.


Before You Start: Quick Tips for Choosing Fonts

Know what style you need. Are you looking for something handwritten and whimsical? Clean and modern? Bold and blocky? Having a general idea makes searching much easier.

Think about how you’ll use it. A font that looks great on a large wall sign might be hard to read on small labels. Consider the size and format of your final project.

Look for font families. Many free font sites offer font families—groups of fonts with the same design in different styles (bold, italic, regular). This gives you more options without hunting for multiple fonts.

Always check the license. Some fonts are free for personal use only. If you’re selling your crafts, make sure the font is licensed for commercial use.


Best Websites for Free Fonts

Google Fonts

Google Fonts offers over 900 font families, and they’re all completely free for personal and commercial use. The fonts are open source, so you can use them however you like.

What makes it great: You can preview fonts with your own text before downloading, and they work beautifully in design software like Canva and Adobe Creative Suite.

Best for: Clean, professional fonts that are safe for commercial projects.

🔗 fonts.google.com


Font Squirrel

Font Squirrel curates high-quality fonts that are licensed for commercial use. They’re picky about what they include, so you know you’re getting good stuff.

What makes it great: Their font generator tool lets you create a custom font package with only the styles and characters you need.

Best for: Commercial-safe fonts with a more curated selection.

🔗 fontsquirrel.com


DaFont

DaFont is one of the most popular free font sites, with over 35,000 fonts to browse. The collection is organized by theme and style, so you can easily find holiday fonts, retro fonts, script fonts, and more.

What makes it great: Huge variety and easy-to-browse categories.

Heads up: Many fonts here are free for personal use only. Always check the license before using a font for products you’ll sell.

🔗 dafont.com


1001 Fonts

Similar to DaFont, 1001 Fonts offers over 13,000 free fonts organized by theme and style. They have a handy preview feature that lets you type in your own text to see how it looks.

What makes it great: Easy previewing and lots of variety.

🔗 1001fonts.com


Behance

Behance is a platform where designers showcase their work—and many share their font creations for free. You can find some truly unique, artistic fonts here that you won’t see everywhere else.

What makes it great: One-of-a-kind fonts from talented designers.

Heads up: Check each font’s terms carefully, as some are for personal use only.

🔗 behance.net


Other Places to Find Free Fonts

Design software: Programs like Canva and Adobe Creative Suite come with built-in font libraries. You might already have access to more fonts than you realize!

Individual font designers: Many designers offer free fonts on their personal websites or through platforms like Fontspring or MyFonts. These are often free for personal use, with paid licenses for commercial projects.


A Note About Using Fonts Legally

Free doesn’t always mean “use however you want.” Some fonts labeled as free are only intended for personal projects—not for items you sell.

Before using any font, take a minute to read the license. Look for terms like:

  • Personal use only – You can use it for yourself, but not for anything you sell
  • Commercial use allowed – You’re free to use it in products you sell
  • Donation requested – The font is free, but the designer appreciates a small contribution

Using fonts ethically supports the designers who create them and keeps you out of legal trouble. Win-win!


Quick Reference: Which Site Should You Use?

If you need…Try this site
Commercial-safe fontsGoogle Fonts or Font Squirrel
Huge varietyDaFont or 1001 Fonts
Unique, artistic fontsBehance
Fonts you already haveCheck Canva or Adobe

Now go find the perfect font for your next project—happy crafting!

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I’m Mari

Welcome to Craft Pop Cult

I started crafting as a creative outlet, and before I knew it, I was hooked—literally. Now I spend my days crocheting, cutting vinyl, and dreaming up my next project. This blog is where I share what I’ve learned (and what I’m still figuring out). Whether you’re just starting or have been crafting for years, I hope you find something here that sparks your creativity.

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